Regeneration Explained
Regeneration may refer to:
Science and technology
- Regeneration (biology), the ability to recreate lost or damaged cells, tissues, organs and limbs
- Regeneration (ecology), the ability of ecosystems to regenerate biomass, using photosynthesis
- Regeneration in humans, the ability of humans to recreate, or induce the regeneration of, lost tissue
- Regenerative (design), a process for resilient and sustainable development
- Regenerative agriculture, a sub-category of organic agriculture
History and politics
Music
Film and television
Literature
Other uses
See also
- Bush regeneration, an ecological technique practiced in Australia
- DPF regeneration, removing soot from a diesel particulate filter
- Hydrochloric acid regeneration, a chemical process for the reclamation of HCl from metal chloride solutions as hydrochloric acid
- Presumptive regeneration, the idea that the children of Christians will be born again because God cares for and chooses families as well as individuals
- Regenerative amplification, a process used to generate short but strong pulses of laser light
- Regenerative brake, an apparatus or system which allows a vehicle to recapture energy normally lost to heat when braking
- Regeneration buffer (or regen buffer for short), a kind of video memory buffer in computer video hardware
- Regenerative capacitor memory, a type of computer memory used in the Atanasoff - Berry computer
- Regenerative circuit, a circuit in electronics that allows a signal to be amplified many times
- Regenerative cooling (rocket), a process in rocket engines
- Regenerative medicine, Clinical therapy to replace or regenerate human cells, tissue or organs, to restore or establish normal function
- Regenerative process, a class of stochastic processes in applied probability
- Urban regeneration, or urban renewal
- Regeneración, Mexican newspaper